Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar’s birth anniversary is not...
- dhadakkamgarunion0
- 4 days ago
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar’s birth anniversary is not just a commemoration of a great leader, but a reminder of the unfinished journey toward justice and equality. Born into adversity, he rose through intellect, courage, and relentless struggle to become the architect of India’s Constitution and the voice of the oppressed. His vision of democracy was not limited to ballots and institutions, but extended to dignity, fraternity, and social harmony. Ambedkar taught us that true freedom lies in annihilating caste and ensuring equal opportunity for all. Today, as India faces new challenges of inequality and division, his words remain a guiding light. Paying tribute to Babasaheb is not about ritual, but about recommitting ourselves to his ideals of liberty, equality, and brotherhood that can truly transform society.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Saudi Arabia has now activated its joint military pact with Pakistan, deploying Pakistani troops and aircraft for its defense. This move signals that negotiations have collapsed, and if Iran strikes Saudi territory, Pakistani soldiers will be on the frontline. In effect, Washington and Riyadh appear to be preparing to drag Pakistan into a potential conflict against Iran. Analysts suggest Pakistan was nudged into the role of mediator only to ensure its eventual involvement. Under the agreement, Islamabad is obliged to provide such support, while Saudi Arabia continues to extend crucial financial aid during Pakistan’s economic crises. The arrangement underscores how regional alliances are being reshaped, with Pakistan’s military commitment serving Saudi interests but also exposing it to the risks of a wider Middle Eastern confrontation.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane Â
The Bengal election battlefield has shifted dramatically, with Congress no longer aiming to block the BJP but to defeat Mamata Banerjee herself. The humiliation from Sagar Dighi’s bypoll, Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury’s loss engineered by Yusuf Pathan, and Mamata’s support to Kejriwal in Delhi has sharpened Congress’s resolve. Now contesting all 294 seats, Congress is focusing on Muslim-majority constituencies where it polled strongly in 2024, winning one Lok Sabha seat with 28 lakh votes. The entry of Mausam Noor has further strengthened the party. As Congress eats into Mamata’s vote share, the BJP stands to gain, turning Bengal into a triangular contest. The outcome remains uncertain until official results are declared, but the Congress–TMC rivalry has clearly become the defining axis of Bengal’s politics.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Once a towering figure, now reduced to frailty—unable to climb stairs, stand for minutes, or even speak clearly—yet the old habits of bitterness and division refuse to die. Politics no longer values such relics, but the urge to sow discord lingers. The recent attempt to exploit the government women officers’ first literary meet by penning divisive words in the Saudamini souvenir shows how deep-rooted these instincts are. Instead of celebrating progress, the effort was to fracture the spiritual unity of the Warkari tradition. This is not politics, it is pettiness masquerading as relevance. The truth is simple: physical decline may silence the body, but the mind’s corrosive tendencies remain stubborn. And that stubbornness, more than weakness, reveals why such figures have lost all worth in today’s public life.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
On April 6, 2026, India stunned the world when Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced that the Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) at Kalpakkam had achieved criticality—a milestone that global nuclear experts, intelligence agencies, and even environmentalists could not ignore. Why? Because fast breeder programs worth over $100 billion worldwide have mostly failed, plagued by leaks and fires in the U.S., France, Japan, and others. India’s PFBR, however, converts uranium-238 into plutonium-239 and, crucially, sets the stage for harnessing thorium. With 25% of the world’s thorium reserves, India holds the key to clean energy for centuries—one kilo of thorium equals the energy of 30 lakh kilos of coal. The government’s declared goal: 100 GW nuclear capacity by 2047. This isn’t just science—it’s India’s energy independence blueprint.


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